Aries

In astronomy, Aries is a constellation, or group of stars. It is one of the 12 constellations that lie in the path of Earth’s orbit around the sun. These 12 are called the constellations of the zodiac. Aries is located between Pisces and Taurus in the zodiac. The name Aries is Latin for “ram.”

An observer on Earth will see different constellations at different times of the year. Aries is visible in both the Northern and Southern hemispheres from September through February. The best time to see the constellation is at about 9:00 in the evening in early December. The dates associated with the constellation as a sign of the zodiac are March 21–April 19.

The constellation was associated with a ram from the earliest times. The brightest star in the constellation is known as Hamal, which comes from the Arabic for “lamb.” In ancient Egypt the constellation was identified with the god Amon, who often took the form of a ram or a human with a ram’s head.

In Greek mythology, it was associated with a ram that had a golden fleece. According to one story, the son and daughter of King Athamas of Thessaly had to flee the kingdom to escape their stepmother. They flew away on the back of a ram with a golden fleece. The daughter fell off and landed in the sea, but the son landed safely in Colchis, on the eastern shore of the Black Sea. He sacrificed the ram to Zeus, who placed it in the heavens as the constellation. Another version of the story says that after the ram was sacrificed, its fleece was left in Colchis, where it was guarded by a dragon. A hero named Jason later stole the fleece with the help of a group of men called the Argonauts and returned it to Thessaly.

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